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Ngợp

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Năm 1914, sau ba năm bị cuốn vào Nhịp cùng John Middleton Murry, bắt đầu mệt lả, Mansfield đến sống trong một thành phố lạ. Con người lúc nào cũng cuống cuồng lao vào những mối tình, tuyệt vọng nương nhờ hơi ấm chập chờn của phăng te di ấy cuối cùng cũng sống một mình. Một mình và hạnh phúc, dù vẫn không ngừng viết những lá thư da diết cho tình nhân và đồng chí ở xa. Chính vào quãng này, Mansfield mới bắt đầu thực sự viết được, bắt đầu tìm lại được mình. Hình ảnh trở về từ tuổi thơ - cây lô hội - trở thành báp têm cho truyện mở đầu Ngợp, xuất bản năm 1918 - năm cuối cùng thế chiến.

Ngợp sinh ra trong lòng cuộc chiến lớn, nhưng gần như chẳng thể đọc thấy gì của chiến tranh trong những ấn tượng "tím và hồng" của Mansfield. Mansfield mới chỉ bắt đầu tìm lại, bắt đầu thấy thế giới những người chết mở ra. Sẽ còn cần nhiều năm nữa, đến tận Tiệc vườn, để tuổi thơ hiện ra trong toàn bộ những kỳ diệu hãi hùng, cùng cuộc chiến đã cướp đi người anh yêu quý. Đó cũng là thời điểm Mansfield nhìn thấy kết cục, đi thẳng đến số phận mình.


Ngợp là tập truyện thứ ba của Katherine Mansfield mà chúng tôi thực hiện, cùng Ở nhà trọ Đức và Tiệc vườn hoàn thành di sản văn chương ấy.

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1918

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About the author

Katherine Mansfield

976 books1,204 followers
Kathleen Mansfield Murry (née Beauchamp) was a prominent New Zealand modernist writer of short fiction who wrote under the pen name of Katherine Mansfield.

Katherine Mansfield is widely considered one of the best short story writers of her period. A number of her works, including "Miss Brill", "Prelude", "The Garden Party", "The Doll's House", and later works such as "The Fly", are frequently collected in short story anthologies. Mansfield also proved ahead of her time in her adoration of Russian playwright and short story writer Anton Chekhov, and incorporated some of his themes and techniques into her writing.

Katherine Mansfield was part of a "new dawn" in English literature with T.S. Eliot, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. She was associated with the brilliant group of writers who made the London of the period the centre of the literary world.

Nevertheless, Mansfield was a New Zealand writer - she could not have written as she did had she not gone to live in England and France, but she could not have done her best work if she had not had firm roots in her native land. She used her memories in her writing from the beginning, people, the places, even the colloquial speech of the country form the fabric of much of her best work.

Mansfield's stories were the first of significance in English to be written without a conventional plot. Supplanting the strictly structured plots of her predecessors in the genre (Edgar Allan Poe, Rudyard Kipling, H. G. Wells), Mansfield concentrated on one moment, a crisis or a turning point, rather than on a sequence of events. The plot is secondary to mood and characters. The stories are innovative in many other ways. They feature simple things - a doll's house or a charwoman. Her imagery, frequently from nature, flowers, wind and colours, set the scene with which readers can identify easily.

Themes too are universal: human isolation, the questioning of traditional roles of men and women in society, the conflict between love and disillusionment, idealism and reality, beauty and ugliness, joy and suffering, and the inevitability of these paradoxes. Oblique narration (influenced by Chekhov but certainly developed by Mansfield) includes the use of symbolism - the doll's house lamp, the fly, the pear tree - hinting at the hidden layers of meaning. Suggestion and implication replace direct detail.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 190 reviews
Profile Image for Petra X.
2,455 reviews35.8k followers
August 18, 2021
This short story - a woman has a dinner party and there is an awful suprise at the end, is kind of Chekov-esque and indeed refers to Chekov in the story. At first I thought this was going to be about a bipolar woman in a manic episode where everything is heightened, brighter, more beautiful, happier. But no, and I'm not sure what Mansfield meant by such overwrought writing.

But still, this woman, Bertha is very happy. She is happily married to a man she adores, she has a blissful baby also Bertha, she adores, a nanny to look after her, servants to prepare her dinner party, all she has to do is arrange the fruit on a plate. And glance into her garden where the pear tree is blossoming quite perfectly, it is at the epitome of its existence, as she is, she feels. Such a privileged existence.

The dinner party guests are a couple, close friends, an artsy-fartsy writer who is flavour of the moment for fashionable dinner parties, and a new friend, Pearl, to whom she feels a close connection and she is sure that Pearl feels it too. Her husband, Harry, finds Pearl dull and says blondes have to watch not getting fat. He isn't any nicer to Pearl at the party either. She can't wait for the guests to leave so filled for desire for her husband is she.

An interesting short-story but not of the standard of Chekov, or perhaps I didn't think so much of it because apart from the excellent Miss Brill, I'm not a Katherine Mansfield fan.
Profile Image for Cecily.
1,322 reviews5,340 followers
November 25, 2022
What can you do if you are thirty and, turning the corner of your own street, you are overcome, suddenly, by a feeling of bliss - absolute bliss! - as though you’d suddenly swallowed a bright piece of that late afternoon sun and it burned in your bosom, sending out a little shower of sparks into every particle, into every finger and toe?...
It sounds horribly twee, doesn’t it? Stick with it. What sounds too good to be true is bound to be so.

Bertha Young (nominative determinism in the surname?) comes home to prepare for a dinner party. The first hint of something less than perfect is, as often with Mansfield, indicated by clothes:
Bertha threw off her coat; she could not bear the tight clasp of it another moment.

She goes to the nursery, but the nurse scolds her for coming at the wrong moment. It’s her own baby!

She was young. Harry and she were as much in love as ever, and they got on together splendidly and were really good pals. She had an adorable baby. They didn’t have to worry about money. They had this absolutely satisfactory house and garden. And friends - modern, thrilling friends, writers and painters and poets or people keen on social questions - just the kind of friends they wanted. And then there were books, and there was music, and she had found a wonderful little dressmaker, and they were going abroad in the summer, and their new cook made the most superb omelettes…
Not quite bliss, then.

Back to dinner party prep. The guests include:
A ‘find’ of Bertha’s called Pearl Fulton… Bertha had fallen in love with her, as she always did fall in love with beautiful women who had something strange about them.

They gaze out to the garden:
At the far end, against the wall, there was a tall, slender pear tree in fullest, richest bloom; it stood perfect, as though becalmed against the jade-green sky.
The symbolism is explicit:
She seemed to see on her eyelids the lovely pear tree with its wide open blossoms as a symbol of her own life.


Image: “Blossoming Pear Tree” by Van Gogh (Source)

Pearl and a pear tree - nominative determinism again?

From comfortable contentment, Mansfield, as so often, takes the story in another direction.

More Mansfield

The Garden Party. See my review HERE. It explores manners, class, and expectations, singed by death.

The Daughters of the Late Colonel. See my review HERE. It explores manners, class, and expectations, singed by death.

Miss Brill. See my review HERE. It’s a very short vignette of loneliness.

• You can read this story, and others, HERE.

Pram in the hall

This story has the line:
‘This is a sad, sad fall!’ said Mug, pausing in front of Little B’s perambulator. ‘When the perambulator comes into the hall - ‘ and he waved the rest of the quotation away.

The idea is invariably credited to Cyril Connolly, as: “There is no more sombre enemy of good art than the pram in the hall.” But he was born in 1903, and this story was published in 1920, and Mansfield suggests it was already a quotation.
Profile Image for Laysee.
631 reviews343 followers
May 24, 2024
Thirty-year-old Bertha Young felt a sudden rush of bliss as if she had ‘suddenly swallowed a bright piece of that late afternoon sun’. How wonderful it is to feel like one is lit by little sparks from within! She had hopes too of perhaps something divine happening to her. She felt such pleasure arranging a platter of fruits and loved how the purple grapes reflected the purple glow of her carpet. She had everything – a husband who loved her, an adorable baby, a comfortable house, a garden, and friends with a taste for the arts. Guests were coming to dinner, amongst whom was a Miss Fulton, a lady Bertha was fascinated with and whom her husband seemed to dislike. The evening went on pleasantly enough. The guests and Bertha herself especially, were ‘laughing and talking, just a trifle too much at their ease, a trifle too unaware.’ In Mansfield’s delicate and subtle narration were hidden certain truths of which Bertha was blissfully unaware The irony surrounding Bertha’s bliss hit home at the end of the dinner party.

This story can be read here: https://web.stanford.edu/~jsabol/exis...
Profile Image for Celeste   Corrêa .
381 reviews325 followers
January 31, 2024
Um verdadeiro 5 estrelas

«Oh! Não haverá um meio de exprimir essa sensação sem falar em "embriaguez e desordem"? Como a civilização é idiota! De que nos serve ter um corpo, se somos obrigados a guardá-lo fechado num estojo como um violino raro?»

Bertha Young, 30 anos, casada com uma filha bebé sente-se a transbordar de felicidade que não quer arrumar no estojo do violino.

Um dia de Primavera; Uma exuberância sensual de cores e cheiros; Tanta felicidade que não lhe apaga o fogo do peito.

Um almoço com convidados a lembrar Virginia Woolf (Coincidência? Alfinetada?).

«Em breve toda essa gente se vai embora. A casa ficará quieta, quieta. As luzes apagadas. E tu e ele estarão a sós, juntinhos, no quarto escuro - na cama quente...»

«Pela primeira vez na sua vida, Berta desejou o marido.»

Uma cena inesperada no final dessa tarde. Um final aberto. Conseguirá Bertha manter o sentimento de felicidade?

Traduzido por Erico Veríssimo com o títuto Felicidade
Profile Image for Paul Ataua.
2,198 reviews290 followers
December 5, 2022
“How absurd it was. Why have a baby if it has to be kept- not in a case like a rare, rare fiddle- but in another woman’s arms?”

It is a beautiful afternoon and Bertha Young, married with child, feels an intense feeling of nervous happiness she doesn’t really understand as she prepares for her dinner party that evening. Everything points to a wonderful future. Katherine Mansfield is one of my all-time favorites and I reviewed her ‘Collected Works’ three or four years ago, but have always felt the inadequacy of reviewing a whole book of stories when each individual one is itself a work of art. I was happy to see her short stories receiving individual reviews and felt I would add to them. Revisiting its themes of perception and reality. and of the restraints against flourishing, meant rereading it was a joy. Mansfield is always to be recommended!
Profile Image for Hossein Sharifi.
162 reviews8 followers
November 14, 2016
Bliss
by Katherine Mansfield

*SUMMARY:
‘Bliss’’ opens with Bertha Young reflecting on how wonderful her life is. As she walks home, she is overwhelmed by a feeling of bliss; she feels tremendously content with her home, her husband, her baby, and her friends.

داستان با برتا یونگ شروع میشود. برتا زنی سی ساله و همسر هری یونگ است. ابتدای داستان بازتابی است از شادی و رضایت برتا. همانگونه به خانه می رود می رقصد و میدود و نمیتواند معمولی راه برود. بسسار از خانه و همسر و دوستان و فرزندش راضی است.

At home, she begins to prepare for a dinner party she is having that evening. She reflects on the guests that will be arriving soon: Mr. and Mrs. Knight, an artistic couple; Eddie Warren, a playwright; and Pearl Fulton, Bertha’s newest friend. Bertha wishes that her husband, Harry, would like Pearl; he has expressed some misgivings over the women’s burgeoning friendship and Bertha hopes they will eventually become friends too.

برتا در خانه مشغول آشپزی برای مهمانی شب است.. قرار است زوجی هنرمند به خانه آنها بیاید. همچنین آرزو میکند که همسرش آنان را دوست داشته باشد.

As Bertha waits for her guests, she looks out on her garden. Her enjoyment of a pear tree with wide open blossoms, which she sees as representing herself, is ruined by two cats creeping across the lawn. Bertha meditates on how happy she is and how perfect her life is. She goes upstairs to dress, and soon thereafter her guests and husband arrive for dinner.

زمانی که بارتا منتظر مهمانان است، از پنجره به بیرون نگاه میکند و درخت گلابی با شکوفه های بازش را میبیند که به وسیله دو گربه آسیب دیده است. این درخت در واقع نشان دهنده شخصیت و زندگی بارتا است. بارتا سعی میکند با تمرکز و اندیشیدن به خوبی های زندگی اش این تفکرات را از خود دور کند. در همین حال مهمان ها و همسرش از راه می رسند.

The group moves into the dining room, where they eat with relish and discuss the contemporary theater and literary scene. Bertha thinks about the pear tree again. She also senses that Pearl shares her feelings of bliss, and she is simply waiting for a sign from the other woman to show her recognition of the empathy between them.

به اتاق غذاخوری رفته و شروع به بحث در مورد تئاتر و صحنه های ادبی میکنند. او رضایت را در چهره مهمانش (پرل) نیز می بیند و منتظر زمانی است که زن احساس خود را بیان کند. در همین حال دوباره به درخت گلابی می اندیشد.

After dinner, as Bertha is about to make the coffee, Pearl gives her the sign by asking if Bertha has a garden. Bertha pulls apart the curtains to display the garden and the pear tree. Bertha imagines that Pearl responds positively to the tree, but she is not sure if it really happened.
Over coffee, the group talks about a variety of topics. Bertha perceives Harry’s dislike for Pearl and wants to tell him how much she has shared with her friend. She is suddenly overcome by a feeling of sexual desire for her husband. This is the first time she has felt this way, and she is eager for the guests to leave so she can be alone with Harry. After the Knights leave, Pearl and Eddie are set to share a taxi. As Pearl goes to the hall to get her coat, Harry accompanies her. Eddie asks Bertha if she has a certain book of poems. Bertha goes to retrieve the book from a nearby table. As she looks out into the hallway, she sees her husband and Pearl embrace and make arrangements to meet the next day. Pearl reenters the room to thank Bertha for the party. The two guests leave and Harry, still cool and collected, says he will shut up the house. Bertha runs to the window to look at the pear tree. She cries ‘‘‘Oh, what is going to happen now?’’’ but outside the pear tree is just the same as ever.

بعد از شام برتا میخواهد قهوه درست کند. پرل یکدلی خود را با سوال کردن از برتا در مورد باغچه نشان میدهد. برا پرده را کنار زده و امیدوار است که پرل نیز چنین احساس مثبتی نسبت به درخت گلابی داشته باشد، اما مطمعن نیست.
بعد از قهوه در مورد مطالب مختلفی حرف میزنند. اما برتا حس میکند که شوهرش پرل را دوست ندارد و برتا میخواهد تا به شوهرش از احساس مشترک خود و پرل بگوید. اما ناگهان علاقه ی شدید جنسی به شوهرش پیدا میکند، طوری که تا بحال چنین حسی نداشته و می خواهد زودتر با همسرش تنها شود. ادی از بارتا میخواهد که برای او کتاب شعری بیاورد. وقتی برتا از بیرون راهرو نگاه میکند، همسرش را میبیند که پرل را در آغوش کشیده و برای دیدار مجدد فردا با پرل قرار میگذارد !
پرل دوباره وارد اتاق میشود تا از بارتا برای مهمانی تشکر کند.
برتا به سمت پنجره می رود و با خود میگوید :" حالا چه اتفاقی قرار است بی افتد" اما بیرون درخت گلابی مثل همیشه است.

*Characters:
Pearl Fulton
Pearl Fulton is Bertha’s enigmatic مرموزnew friend in the story. With her indirect way of looking at people and her half-smile, she appears distant and mysterious. Although Bertha acknowledges that she and Pearl have not had a really intimate conversation, on the night of the dinner party Bertha senses an intimate attachment between them. This feeling of attachment is confirmed when Bertha discovers that Pearl is having an affair with her husband, Harry.

Mrs. Knight
Mrs. Knight and her husband are guests at Bertha’s dinner party. Though she is ‘‘awfully keen on interior decoration,’’ Mrs. Knight dresses herself in wild clothing and resembles a giant banana peel.

Norman Knight
Norman Knight is about to open a theater that will show thoroughly modern plays.

Eddie Warren
Eddie Warren is an effeminate زن صفت playwright. He is described as always being ‘‘in a state of acute distress’’ and over the course of the evening complains about his taxi ride to the party.

Bertha Young
Bertha, a young housewife, is the main character in the story. Despite the fact that the story is told from her perspective, readers learn few concrete details about her. She appears to enjoy a fairly leisurely life, as she and her husband are financially comfortable. However, though she claims she and her husband are ‘‘pals,’’ her home life would seem not as ideal as she views it; her marriage lacks passion, and the nanny clearly keeps her at a distance from her young daughter.
Bertha’s most notable characteristic is her inexplicable state of happiness. As the story opens, she is pleased with all life offers her. During her dinner party, she seems to find joy in almost everything she sees: the lovely pear tree in the garden, which seems to represent both herself and Pearl Fulton. She even sexually desires her husband for the first time in her life and looks forward to spending the rest of the evening alone with him. By the end of the story, however, this world in which Bertha finds such pleasure is shattered when she discovers that her husband is having an affair with Pearl.

Harry Young
Harry is Bertha’s husband. He provides a good income for his family, enjoys good food, and has a zest for life. However, his most notable characteristic is his duplicitous دوگانهnature: while he declares to Bertha that he finds Pearl Fulton dull, he is secretly engaged in a love affair with her. In fact, during the dinner party, he pretends to dislike Pearl. Yet he risks exposure of the affair when he embraces Pearl in the hallway while his wife is in the next room.


*Themes
Marriage and Adultery
The themes of marriage and adultery are central to ‘‘Bliss.’’ Bertha believes (or makes herself believe) she has a fulfilling, complete marriage. Although she characterizes her husband as a good pal, she still contends they are as much in love as they ever were.
*The climactic( THE CLIMAX) event of the story—Bertha’s realization of Harry’s affair with Pearl—proves that her husband does not share his wife’s contentment. As Harry’s affair demonstrates, he is not happy with the lack of passion in their marriage. Harry’s actions reveal his duplicitous nature: not only has Harry been hiding the affair from his wife, he also pretends to dislike Pearl in order to cover it up. The risk that Harry takes in kissing Pearl in his own home, as well as his method of hiding his true feelings, indicate the likelihood that he and Pearl share a very strong connection.

Change and Transformation
Change and transformation are subtle themes in the story. Bertha’s extreme sense of bliss, along with her new feelings of desire for her husband, show that she is undergoing a profound change in her life. She wonders if the feeling of bliss that she had all day was actually leading up to her increased attraction to her husband. At the end of the story, she wants nothing more than for the guests to leave so she can be alone with Harry.

Bertha’s transformation into a sexual being is abruptly halted when she sees her husband kissing Pearl
Fulton. She realizes that she can no longer look at her world as perfect, nor can she move forward to a new relationship with Harry. When she runs to the window to look at the pear tree she finds that it is ‘‘as lovely as ever and as full of flower and as still.’’ This is a clear sign that the change Bertha has undergone will be brought to an abrupt halt, for the pear tree—which is seen to represent Bertha— remains exactly the same.

Modernity
The concept of modernity is an important aspect of the story. Bertha constantly characterizes the elements of her life—her relationship with her husband and her friends, for instance—as being thoroughly modern.
However, Bertha’s view of modernity would seem to be a liking for things that are shallow, superficial, and duplicitous. She has rationalized her poor sexual relationship with her husband as ‘‘being modern’’ because they are such good pals. Thus, in Bertha’s mind, a modern marriage needn’t be based on love or attraction but simply on the bonds that would make two people friends.
Her view of the modern marriage hurts her relationship with Harry as he experiences dissatisfaction at the state of their relationship. Even Bertha and Harry’s philosophy of raising children is perceived as modern.
Bertha seems to spend little time with her daughter, instead entrusting her to a jealous nanny; moreover, Harry claims to have no interest in his daughter.
Bertha’s friends are also considered thoroughly modern—but they appear utterly ridiculous. Mrs. Knight is described as a cross between a giant monkey and a banana peel. Her modern ideas for decorating—including
French fries embroidered on the curtains and chair backs shaped like frying pans— seem distasteful and ugly.
Plays and poems mentioned by the guests seem dismal and pseudointellectual, and the satire reaches a high point in Eddie Warren’s lauding of a poem that begins, ‘‘Why Must it Always be Tomato Soup?’’ The guests and their interests, rather than seeming ‘‘modern’’ and ‘‘thrilling,’’ seem merely excessive and absurd.


*Symbolism
The most important and complicated symbol in ‘‘Bliss’’ is the pear tree: it represents different people at different times throughout the story. First and foremost, it represents Bertha because she believes that ‘‘its wide open blossoms [are] as symbol of her own life.’’ When Bertha first notices the tree, she is intent on pursuing the belief that her life is full and rich, open to wondrous possibilities.
Later on in the story the pear represents Pearl Fulton. Like the pear tree, Pearl, dressed in silver, emits a shimmery, ethereal glow. Thus both Pearl and Bertha—who are actually rivals—are connected to each other by association with the pear tree.
However, the pear tree also takes on a masculine identity in its phallic description: ‘‘it seemed, like the flame of a candle, to stretch up, to point, to quiver in the bright air, to grow taller and taller’’ under the gaze of the women. In this manifestation, the pear tree can be seen as representing Harry, who further unites the two women.
In addition, the pear tree seems to be reaching toward the moon, which previously had been identified with Pearl. Thus Harry’s sexual desire, which Bertha now wants for herself, is clarified as reaching toward Pearl, not Bertha.


*The point of view is third-person limited.

*Satire
Satire is the use of humor, wit, or ridicule to criticize human nature and societal institutions. Indirect satire, as found in ‘‘Bliss,’’ relies upon the ridiculous behavior of characters to make its point. Bertha describes her friends as ‘‘modern’’ and ‘‘thrilling’’ people, yet they are presented as ridiculous figures. Mrs. Knight resembles some kind of monkey, wearing a dress reminiscent of banana peels. The most notable characteristic of Eddie Warren, who appears to be a writer, is his white socks and his affected way of speaking.


Profile Image for Flo.
649 reviews2,248 followers
October 8, 2021
Although Bertha Young was thirty she still had moments like this when she wanted to run instead of walk, to take dancing steps on and off the pavement, to bowl a hoop, to throw something up in the air and catch it again, or to stand still and laugh at—nothing—at nothing, simply.
What can you do if you are thirty and, turning the corner of your own street, you are overcome, suddenly by a feeling of bliss—absolute bliss!—as though you'd suddenly swallowed a bright piece of that late afternoon sun and it burned in your bosom, sending out a little shower of sparks into every particle, into every finger and toe? . . .

*shrugs*
Profile Image for Mighty Aphrodite.
606 reviews58 followers
December 10, 2025
Bertha Young ha trent’anni, sta tornando a casa e si sente viva. Uno strano e inspiegabile calore le invade il petto, sfrigola sulla sua pelle, la fa sentire agitata, ebbra.

Non sa spiegare quella sensazione che è piombata su di lei come un fulmine a ciel sereno mentre camminava. Assomiglia dolorosamente a un’epifania, un risveglio dell’anima e del corpo che fa quasi male in tutta la sua insopprimibile chiarezza.

Vorrebbe poter ridere ad alta voce, vorrebbe potersi mettere a correre, esprimere a pieno quella felicità che la invade e la accarezza come un amante appassionato.

Tra le mura di casa, però, sembra non esserci spazio per quel calore: ci sono obblighi da rispettare, cose da fare, domestiche con le quali parlare. Il volto dolce e sorridente di sua figlia pare essere l’unica cosa in grado di risvegliare quella scintilla, ma tra lei e la bambina si frappone la presenza invadente della bambinaia e la gioia va in frantumi. Che senso ha avere dei figli se poi non li si può stringere a sé quando si vuole?

continua a leggere qui: https://parlaredilibri.wordpress.com/...
Profile Image for Cristina.
423 reviews307 followers
February 16, 2017
Un relato que es una delicia.

Ganas de seguir descubriendo lo que esconde Katherine Mansfield.

Las gracias son para el sitio Eterna Cadencia: http://eternacadencia.com.ar/blog/hyp...

Leído aquí: http://www.ciudadseva.com/textos/cuen...

Información biográfica de la autora, aquí: http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?i...



17.02.2016

Sigo leyendo a Katherine Mansfield a sorbitos. Hoy, "El canario": http://www.ciudadseva.com/textos/cuen...

Un relato de tintes poéticos sobre la soledad y la melancolía.


24.06.2016

Después de descubrir gracias a Mª Ángeles Cabré que Katherine Mansfield fue una de las autoras favoritas de las escritoras Isak Dinesen y Carson McCullers, yo, por mi parte, le sigo rindiendo pleitesía también.

Leí "La mosca": http://www.ciudadseva.com/textos/cuen...

Un relato sobre la crueldad de la guerra y el instinto de supervivencia.

Vila- Matas opina lo siguiente: "Pero mi amiga no era Marguerite Duras, más bien estaba emparentada con el entrañable Olmo y, sobre todo, con Katherine Mansfield, cuentista neozelandesa que escribió "La mosca", uno de los mejores cuentos del siglo pasado. En ese cuento, con su habitual poesía de lo mínimo y lo fugaz —con ese tipo de melancolía que a Proust, por ejemplo, le permitía describir los destellos del crepúsculo sobre los árboles del Bois de Boulogne—, narraba la entrada en los dominios de la muerte y la salida a la vida una y otra vez de una mosca atrapada en un borrón de tinta: una enfermedad literaria.


Sospecho que esa mosca era la propia Katherine Mansfield, que se pasó media vida luchando contra la tuberculosis, contra la muerte: "Los relojes están dando las diez [...] tengo tuberculosis. Hay una gran cantidad de humedad (y dolor) en mi pulmón malo". La enfermedad fue el eje de su vida atormentada y hablaba de ella en su diario de forma obsesiva, del mismo modo que la mosca que mató mi amiga podría haber hablado, largo y tendido, de su tuberculosis particular: la humedad del martini blanco."

*Fragmento sacado de este artículo: http://www.letraslibres.com/revista/l...


09.01.2017

Avui, per tal de recordar la publicació en català dels contes de "Felicitat" l'any 2001, llegeixo el conte "Anet en vinagre" aquí: http://www.catorze.cat/noticia/5029/a....


Es tracta d'un relat sobre el retrobament de dos amants després de sis anys sense haver sabut res l'un de l'altra. Mansfield passa del reconeixement inicial per part d' ella, la tensió sexual que reviscola i l'adulació d' ell envers ella, per acabar amb la decepció quan ella opta per deixar-lo d'escoltar anant-se'n.

És com si el lector es convertís en testimoni d'una relació sentimental fallida de llarga durada però concentrada aquí en una tarda.

Genial.


16.02.2017

"Matrimonio a la moda" es un retrato despiadado de un matrimonio que hace aguas. Él pasa la semana en Londres trabajando y solo regresa a la casa familiar, alejada de la ciudad, los fines de semana. Para ella, que él vuelva es un estorbo. Para no aburrirse se pasa el día con unos amigos sin hacer nada: frivolidad y risas vacías. La historia termina cuando él le manda una carta de amor que ella lee en voz alta a sus amigos que se burlan. Parece que nada cambia y la vida sigue.

El título no tiene desperdicio. Fantástica, Mansfield.

Leído aquí: http://ciudadseva.com/texto/matrimoni...
Profile Image for Lizz.
436 reviews117 followers
May 25, 2024
I don’t write reviews.

I stumbled upon this today and what a little gem it is! A story over a hundred years old, which hasn’t aged a day.

Bertha is so full of live, yet she doesn’t live. This sense of not living is overwhelming her, as she watches her household staff plan her parties, cook her food, raise her child. She feels things are perfectly balanced and fears the balance tipping and losing that designed happiness she thinks she’s feeling. Or something. Please read it too!

https://web.stanford.edu/~jsabol/exis...
Profile Image for Mahima.
177 reviews139 followers
June 10, 2017
Mansfield's short stories are delightful, so much so that she has made me want to read more of them, and not just hers. I haven't read a lot of short stories. I suppose it is time I change that.
Profile Image for Lea.
1,113 reviews299 followers
March 27, 2018
I thought the title story "Bliss" was just wonderful, but I didn't really understand the other two. But I definitely want to read more of Mansfield now.
Profile Image for John Hatley.
1,383 reviews234 followers
February 10, 2021
This is another short story I first read in Swedish. It was first published just over 100 years ago and it strikes me that the somewhat exaggerated romanticism in the original English is slightly more apparent than I remember it from 5 years ago. It underscores the feeling of impending tragedy.
Profile Image for Marion.
21 reviews14 followers
February 22, 2017
"Bliss" was an incredibly well thought-out short story. I felt almost blinded by the intensity of the emotions of Bertha, the main character. The way Mansfield described how she saw the world was so pure and naive, but also with a sense of urgency, where so many emotions happen in only 12 pages (human emotions do have a tendency to superpose themselves, coming by and leaving again very fast) and it made me as a reader oblivious to what was really going on, which is why the ending surprised me. Although she did sound as if she wanted to reassure herself on the normality of her life, the extreme towards which she took her feelings and the moment they share outside of the kitchen are beautiful, but you can tell that she is almost wearing blinkers (the glasses horses wear to obstruct their peripheral vision), in the sense that she takes into account the things that confirm her opinion on current events — which is a trait that is very human, although here taken to a new level. The introduction of implied homosexuality is subversive and shocking for its time (1918) — for both the poet and Bertha —, but it is also in line with Bertha’s wish to be “modern”, although she consciously focuses on superficial and shallow aspects of this modernity. To me, this theme reminded me of Boris Vian’s writing — it is flowery, excessive, absurd, satiric, and almost simplistic and superficial to cover up the deep signification that might be too hard to face. I liked the symbolism of the pear tree as the leitmotiv of this piece, it stands for blissful ignorance, for Bertha — “its wide open blossoms [are] as symbol of her own life”; how Pearl Fulton is a personified version of it — dressed in silver and emitting a shimmery glow, but actually her rival; the masculine identity it takes on for both women — “it seemed, like the flame of a candle, to stretch up, to point, to quiver in the bright air, to grow taller and taller”, with the tree reaching for the moon, also a representation of Pearl, rather than for Bertha.
Profile Image for John Hatley.
1,383 reviews234 followers
February 12, 2021
It is odd that I have more than once been "introduced" to an author who wrote in another language through a Swedish translation published by Novellix. This is one more example and an excellent introduction to Katherine Mansfield's writing. She writes in a way that encourages the reader to identify with her protagonist and succeeds, I think, masterfully.

I should have done this five years ago, but having now read the English original I'd like to compliment Christina Salby for her excellent Swedish translation!
Profile Image for Okidoki.
1,311 reviews15 followers
February 12, 2018
En novell på 21 sidor. En elak och sorglig betraktelse. I modern svensk översättning av Christina Stalby.
Profile Image for Kansas.
815 reviews487 followers
May 31, 2019
En castellano titulado "Éxtasis" también "Felicidad". Un relato prodigioso por lo que supone el personaje de Bertha apasionada e ingenua, ella viviendo en su mundo propio, levitando llena de felicidad por lo que tiene o por la idea que cree que tiene de su vida, sufre una profunda transformación hacia el final del relato. La vida no es la idea que te quieres hacer de ella y realmente Bertha parece que no esté viviendo sino pasando de puntillas sin pisar a fondo esta vida.

Y hay un punto satírico o irónico en la vision de los personajes que aparecen en esta historia, porque aunque Bertha los considere "modernos" y maravillosos, a nuestros ojos nos parecen ridiculos y pedantes. La visión que ella tiene de sus amigos tampoco es real, como tampoco es real la imagen que tiene de Harry, su marido. El final me lo vi venir pero así y todo me pareció un relato magnífico. Y este párrafo en concreto, lo dice todo del personaje de Bertha:

"Cielos, ¿es qué no hay modo de que puedas expresarlo sin estar ebria o fuera de tus cabales? ¡Necia civilización! ¿Para qué nos darán un cuerpo si tenemos que encerrarlo en un estuche como a un Stradivarius?"
Profile Image for ⋆.˚ Ariana ᡣ𐭩ྀིྀི.
625 reviews51 followers
May 22, 2025
”I must laugh or die.”

Happiness is so ominous, even a superficial one. The moment you feel too much of it, it’s a sign of something dreadful happening soon after. Sadly, you can’t fake happiness through life, no matter how much you try. It always leave a crack open for the reality and grief to creep in.
Profile Image for Ksenia (vaenn).
438 reviews264 followers
November 25, 2017
О, а такий модернізм мені по нраву. Майже безсюжетний, яскравий, прозорий, якийсь аж пурхаючий, але емоційно пронизливий, як комариний писк серед глупої ночі.

Bliss здається лайт-версією "Місіс Делловей", але за спалахом щастя сердешної Берти Янґ визирають такі драми, що де там лайт. The Daughters of the Late Colonels - ідеальна готика без готики, я вже чекала, що в сюжет нарешті зійде привид покійного батечка і все спростить, але без привидів виходить значно страшніше. The Doll's House - my precious, шикарний ляльковий дім як чинник побудови дитячої ієрархії і - водночас - об'єкт чистого мистецтва для наймолодших - це ж прекрасно абсолютно.

Даремно я побоювалася збірок Кетрін Менсфілд. Її гуртом треба читати, три новелки - то надто мало.
Profile Image for Emma☀️.
365 reviews385 followers
December 22, 2018
I read this back in high school and I had to re-read it again this year because it has been playing in my mind the whole day. Bliss is a short story about a married couple, Bertha and Harry, hosting a dinner party with a bunch of interesting dinner guests.
This story is very thought-provoking and metaphorical. Mansfield’s words just sweeps you away, leaving you feeling so many emotions all at once.
Profile Image for Castles.
685 reviews27 followers
July 7, 2025
The story “Je ne parles pas Franciais” was absolutely brilliant. The rest, mostly, I’ve found a little too dickens like Victorian.
Profile Image for Cass.
847 reviews231 followers
February 20, 2020
4/5

I actually really enjoyed this small collection of short stories by Katherine Mansfield.

I found 'Bliss' to be poignant and thought-provoking. I also have been caught in that state of pure innocent, naive bliss, unaware of the true implications of the situation. When the reality settles in, do you continue to look to the pear tree (ignorant bliss), or do you see it all for what it is?

'The Daughters of the Late Colonel' was just okay. I appreciated how Mansfield portrayed the female dependence on males in this society but I just wasn't completely drawn into the narrative.

'The Doll's House'... Analysis --> "Through the portrayal of the predicament of the Kelveys, Mansfield brings out the class consciousness that was faithfully handed down by one generation to another, from parents to children and vice versa. Moreover, through the deft portrayal of the character of Kezia, Mansfield tries to challenge the existing social class consciousness which was wreaking havoc on the social fabric." (Source) I enjoyed the story at face value, to be honest, and only sought out the meanings afterwards.

I'm glad I bought this collection. I'll definitely be reading more of her works in the future!
Profile Image for Sadia Mansoor.
554 reviews110 followers
March 19, 2017
Its always a pleasure to read Mansfield. Her narrative style is imaginable & it takes you away from your ordinary life to a state of contentment & blissfulness. This story did exactly the same.

I have read Miss Brill before this short story. Both the stories are about sad & lonely women, who thinks they are happy or are trying to find joy by living their lives to the fullest. Or are content that their favorite people are around them but soon they get to know that they are actually quite lonely. No one seems to like them or want to be with them.
Same happens to the protagonist, Bertha of this story, living a rich & luxurious life. Her life is in bliss for having a husband & a baby. She is happy & everything around her seems to be in a good state until, she finds out that she's been betrayed by her own husband. What a tragic end to her blissful life :(

Now, coming back to the title of the story.. is it really that blissful anymore? Was she ever that blessed to have such a life? Though they are financially stable, have a fine house with rich furnishings, guests coming over to her place, still not everything is perfect. All this time, she was being lied & cheated to! The truth is it was never a BLISSful life! What would she do now? :/

The story is here http://www.katherinemansfieldsociety....
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